Dual-mode calorimetric superconducting nanowire single photon detectors

A dual-operation mode SNSPD is proposed. In the conventional Geiger mode, the sensor operates at temperatures well below the critical temperature TC, working as an event counter without sensitivity to the number of photons that impinge on the sensor. In the calorimetric mode, the detector is operate...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inAPL quantum Vol. 2; no. 2; pp. 026118 - 026118-8
Main Authors Wu, Hsin-Yeh, Besançon, Marc, Chen, Jia-Wern, Chen, Pisin, Glicenstein, Jean-François, Liu, Shu-Xiao, Lu, Yu-Jung, Navick, Xavier-François, Paganis, Stathes, Tuchming, Boris, Tsionou, Dimitra, Tsai, Feng-Yang
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published AIP Publishing LLC 01.06.2025
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Summary:A dual-operation mode SNSPD is proposed. In the conventional Geiger mode, the sensor operates at temperatures well below the critical temperature TC, working as an event counter without sensitivity to the number of photons that impinge on the sensor. In the calorimetric mode, the detector is operated at temperatures just below TC and displays calorimetric sensitivity in the range of 15–250 absorbed photon energy equivalent for a photon beam with a wavelength of 515 nm. In this energy-sensitive mode, photon absorption causes Joule heating of the SNSPD that becomes partially resistive without the presence of latching. Depending on the application, by tuning the sample temperature and bias current using the same readout system, the SNSPD can readily switch between the two modes. In the calorimetric mode, SNSPD recovery times shorter than those in the Geiger mode are observed, reaching values as low as 560 ps. Dual-mode SNSPDs, in addition to providing solutions in applications in spectroscopy and calorimetry, where precise timing and energy resolution are required, may also offer significant advancements in high-speed photon-number-resolving detection through their flexible hybrid architecture, driving innovation in optical quantum computing and quantum-source characterization.
ISSN:2835-0103
2835-0103
DOI:10.1063/5.0270791